Shots Archives - San Diego Magazine https://staging.sandiegomagazine.com/tag/shots/ Thu, 21 Sep 2023 15:19:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://staging.sandiegomagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-SDM_favicon-32x32.png Shots Archives - San Diego Magazine https://staging.sandiegomagazine.com/tag/shots/ 32 32 Favorite Outdoor Photos https://staging.sandiegomagazine.com/guides/favorite-outdoor-photos/ Thu, 06 Mar 2014 07:40:00 +0000 http://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/favorite-outdoor-photos/ The coolest and most beautiful shots from past “outdoorsy” issues

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As we put the finishing touches on our April Get Outside issue—look for it on newsstands and in mailboxes next week!—I got a little nostalgic for all of the hikes, runs and bike trails we’ve featured in issues past. Here’s a selection of my favorite outdoor activity shots from previous issues. Click through to view the full gallery from each issue—and repeat after me: We are so lucky to live in a place where we can be active and enjoy our great weather year-round!

Hang Gliding off Torrey Pines, May 2010. Shot by James Marciariello

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Hang Gliding off Torrey Pines

Surfers over Blacks Beach, July 2013. Shot by Rob Hammer

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Surfers over Blacks Beach

La Jolla Beach Shot, July 2010. Shot by Justin L’Heureux

Favorite Outdoor Photos

La Jolla Beach Shot

Yoga in Misson Bay, August 2011. Shot by Dean Bradshaw

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Yoga in Misson Bay

Dean Bradshaw

Resting on Pacific Crest Trail, April 2012. Shot by Jay Reilly

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Resting on Pacific Crest Trail

Jay Reilly

Cycling through Del Mar, May 2012. Shot by Sam Wells

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Cycling through Del Mar

Cycling through Elfin Forrest, October 2012. Shot by Rob Hammer

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Cycling through Elfin Forrest

Rob Hammer

Yoga at Moonlight Beach in Encinitas, January 2014. Shot by Justin L’Heureux

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Yoga at Moonlight Beach in Encinitas

Running in Torrey Pines, April 2012. Shot by Jay Reilly

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Running in Torrey Pines

Surfing at Blacks Beach in La Jolla, June 2012. Shot by Todd Glaser

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Surfing at Blacks Beach in La Jolla

Todd Glaser

The post Favorite Outdoor Photos appeared first on San Diego Magazine.

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Favorite Outdoor Photos https://staging.sandiegomagazine.com/guides/favorite-outdoor-photos-2/ Thu, 06 Mar 2014 07:40:00 +0000 https://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/favorite-outdoor-photos-2/ The coolest and most beautiful shots from past “outdoorsy” issues

The post Favorite Outdoor Photos appeared first on San Diego Magazine.

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As we put the finishing touches on our April Get Outside issue—look for it on newsstands and in mailboxes next week!—I got a little nostalgic for all of the hikes, runs and bike trails we’ve featured in issues past. Here’s a selection of my favorite outdoor activity shots from previous issues. Click through to view the full gallery from each issue—and repeat after me: We are so lucky to live in a place where we can be active and enjoy our great weather year-round!

Hang Gliding off Torrey Pines, May 2010. Shot by James Marciariello

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Hang Gliding off Torrey Pines

Surfers over Blacks Beach, July 2013. Shot by Rob Hammer

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Surfers over Blacks Beach

La Jolla Beach Shot, July 2010. Shot by Justin L’Heureux

Favorite Outdoor Photos

La Jolla Beach Shot

Yoga in Misson Bay, August 2011. Shot by Dean Bradshaw

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Yoga in Misson Bay

Dean Bradshaw

Resting on Pacific Crest Trail, April 2012. Shot by Jay Reilly

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Resting on Pacific Crest Trail

Jay Reilly

Cycling through Del Mar, May 2012. Shot by Sam Wells

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Cycling through Del Mar

Cycling through Elfin Forrest, October 2012. Shot by Rob Hammer

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Cycling through Elfin Forrest

Rob Hammer

Yoga at Moonlight Beach in Encinitas, January 2014. Shot by Justin L’Heureux

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Yoga at Moonlight Beach in Encinitas

Running in Torrey Pines, April 2012. Shot by Jay Reilly

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Running in Torrey Pines

Surfing at Blacks Beach in La Jolla, June 2012. Shot by Todd Glaser

Favorite Outdoor Photos

Surfing at Blacks Beach in La Jolla

Todd Glaser

The post Favorite Outdoor Photos appeared first on San Diego Magazine.

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Up Close and Personal https://staging.sandiegomagazine.com/uncategorized/up-close-and-personal/ Fri, 01 Mar 2013 01:12:00 +0000 http://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/up-close-and-personal/ Behind the lens with Bil Zelman

The post Up Close and Personal appeared first on San Diego Magazine.

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Up Close and Personal

Bil Zelman Untitle #4

He’s been attacked by a neck-biting monkey while snapping shots of sloths in the Amazon, floated on icebergs in Patagonia, sailed through the Bahamas with Alexandra Cousteau, and licked lemon ants off tree bark as a snack in Peru. He’s partied with Gaga; cracked up the “It” girl of comedy, Kristen Wiig, getting her to squawk like a bird for a portrait; and shot David Bowie as his first megastar assignment at the ripe age of 20. Since then, Taylor Swift, the Rolling Stones, Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Hawk, Jerry Seinfeld, and myriad other A-listers have all posed for him.

But photographer Bil Zelman says his most recent project, Isolated Gesture, a collection of street-style images, is his proudest accomplishment to date. It’s also his first published work and the culmination of a storied 22-year career.

Consistently touted as a Top 200 photographer worldwide, Zelman could live anywhere, but chooses San Diego as his home, along with his producer wife and two rescued dogs.

He grew up in upstate New York, the son of an esteemed research scientist (part of the team that invented the artificial kidney in use today) and an erudite college professor mother. Though genetically wired for success, Zelman proved rebellious from the get-go. He discovered his first true sanctuary in the quiet of a darkroom at age nine. “When that door was closed, no one could come in,” he recalls. He received his first Nikon from his parents, and much of his life since has been experienced through the viewfinder of a camera.

“When I’d see something interesting I would walk by, stick out my arm and click—a huge flash would go off in the subject’s face—and I would keep walking.”

At 15, Zelman had cultivated an artistic style. By the time he hit the State University of New York at Buffalo, he was getting assignments from major music rags, though his trajectory toward success wasn’t without a few hiccups. “On an assignment to shoot Bowie, I was sick with nerves and every shot came back orange and blurry. I cried when I sent them in to the photo editor. Ironically, it was the nascence of the grunge movement and the magazine thought they were brilliant and immediately gave me another assignment. That’s how my career started,” he laughs. “They had no idea they were hiring a kid with a pager.”

In college, he started a project called Isolated Gesture, shooting complete strangers with a modified old 1969 Nikon. Nineteen years later, he’s published a book of street photography bearing that same title. “It’s a deeply personal body of work—a dark and moody one that really defines me as an artist,” Zelman says.

From 1993 to 2002, he obsessively carried his Nikon everywhere he went, visiting small towns, crashing parties and parades. “When I’d see something interesting I would walk by, stick out my arm and click—a huge flash would go off in the subject’s face—and I would keep walking. I never spoke to any of them.”

Zelman targeted events in the newspaper and dressed up as a caterer to gain access—needless to say, he was tossed out of a few soirées and made a few enemies along the way.

“Since Garry Winogrand, Larry Fink, Diane Arbus, William Klein and so many others, the aesthetic of the ‘wrong’ has become accepted practice in photography. Aggressive framing, dramatic contrast, unconventional subjects, unflattering shots—all have become comfortably ensconced in the standard repertoire. These photographers—and Zelman positions himself among them—are agitators of a related sort, purposely getting it wrong in one way so as to get it right in another, disrupting visual order to ignite a kind of visceral disorder,” wrote Leah Olman, Los Angeles Times art critic.

The oversized, hardcover edition of Isolated Gesture was designed by South Park resident Dave Roberts, printed locally by Neyenesch, and can be found at Balboa Park’s Museum of Photographic Arts, where Zelman also has prints in the museum’s permanent collection, and on Zelman’s website (zelmanstudios.com).

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